Do you have faith that that Larry Page at Google will provide benefit, when the company is spending a ton of money on projects that aren't valuable currently?

Do you believe Virginia Rometty and IBM will do anything but buy back stock to hit company estimate targets?

"These are the issues swirling around all of these stocks, and I think they have to be dealt with case by case. Only then can you figure out whether a company's stock is worth owning or worth avoiding," Cramer said.

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Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks during an interview at the Newseum in Washington.

First, let's start with Facebook. The company released beautiful numbers on Tuesday that made investors think that it will have rapid growth in the years ahead. That tune quickly changed, and the stock tanked more than 6 percent on Wednesday.

What happened?

Though Zuckerberg said many positive things on the conference call, people heard a different story. They heard that it will be dramatically ramping up expenses to keep the company growing for the next five years. Investors were additionally freaked out when they realized that 178 million shares from the What'sApp acquisition will hit the tape soon.

"I ask you, what do you want from Facebook? Do you want it to just coast? Is that the ticket?" Cramer asked.

Looking at the plan, Zuckerberg wants to first connect people and then turn them into a business.

Though many investors were shocked that Facebook hadn't already turned its followers into a business, Cramer was impressed. Isn't that what you should want a CEO to think about for a five-year plan?

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Now, in contrast, let's look at a few former market golden children. Remember when IBM's five-year plan was to buy back shares, and Wall Street was head over heels in love? Well, it turns out that got them to the lowest rung of the S&P 500.

How about Twitter? "All I can say after listening to its call is that I wish it had a plan, let alone a five-year plan. How about a five-month plan?" the "Mad Money" host said.